V0RT3X wrote:Just want to say thanks to the mods who cleaned this thread up. Definitely a big +1 from me
Really appreciate that they are keeping this place clean.
Here's a really neat video of Imogen Heaps The Making of me.
Just saw it. Well done
V0RT3X wrote:Just want to say thanks to the mods who cleaned this thread up. Definitely a big +1 from me
Really appreciate that they are keeping this place clean.
Here's a really neat video of Imogen Heaps The Making of me.
Well, no that conclusion isnt logical. And its also a false dichotomy, because you exclude the scenario of 'some male chauvinists have taught her that expressing herself in particular ways, like using DAWs and synths, isnt appropriate for women.' Given the propensity for males to think they 'own' high technology in the first place, (something you can see equally well manifested in gaming) its laughable to handwave away that environment like this.recursive one wrote:Few people are doing this for living, most others do this in order to express themselves somehow. So if some particular woman happens to be not interested in learning synths, DAWs, etc, that's more likely because she doesn't feel the need to express herself in this specific way and not because some male chauvinists have taught her that making music is a "real men's job".
I'm afraid that we don't have enough facts here to make real logical conclusions. It indeed may seem that the music production scene as a whole has large gender disproportion, but I wouldn't mind seeing some actual figures. The bios you are referring to may have some bias based on personal experience and furthermore the punk and rock scenes may be quite different from electronic music, at least because playing in a band, gigging etc involves much more face-to-face interactions than sitting in a home studio and sending the finished tracks to a label manager by e-mail.whyterabbyt wrote:Well, no that conclusion isnt logical. And its also a false dichotomy, because you exclude the scenario of 'some male chauvinists have taught her that expressing herself in particular ways, like using DAWs and synths, isnt appropriate for women.' Given the propensity for males to think they 'own' high technology in the first place, (something you can see equally well manifested in gaming) its laughable to handwave away that environment like this.recursive one wrote:Few people are doing this for living, most others do this in order to express themselves somehow. So if some particular woman happens to be not interested in learning synths, DAWs, etc, that's more likely because she doesn't feel the need to express herself in this specific way and not because some male chauvinists have taught her that making music is a "real men's job".
A simple browse through the autobiographies of and interviews with female punk and rock musicians will certainly illuminate the fact that women have been and continue to be under attack for being seen to be encroaching on 'male' roles in music, whether you artificially separate 'jobs' from 'ways of expression' or not.
Either way, the constant repetition of 'women cant do or dont want to do this stuff' in this thread completely illustrates the 'teaching' that you are denying exists.
Certain men need to have things explained to them...camsr wrote:The mansplaining is strong in this thread, no shortage of that here.
I suspect that the OP might've been hoping to meet some musical women. It's not that I don't understand this; I'd love to myself. It's just that this isn't a dating site. If women come here to engage about music, they should not be pursued like they're on display in a meat market.deastman wrote: Going back to the OP, what exactly are we hoping to get out of this conversation anyway?
It's only contentious because certain men want to justify the status quo with pseudoscience.deastman wrote:We’ve been down the path of discussing why there aren’t more women in music production, which became a surprisingly contentious argument.
Much respect for this!deastman wrote:As for my own part, I’m trying to foster a love for all of this stuff in my own daughter. She has my Kurzweil K2000 in her room, along with several guitars. I got her a Korg Littlebits kit. We’ve had a brief foray into Eurorack, and I’m looking forward to teaching her more about that soon. I’ve also encouraged her to learn Python, and given her the tools to pursue her interests in art and animation (my day job).
WTF? No, definitely not. I never stated at any point trying to meet girlsJace-BeOS wrote:
I suspect that the OP might've been hoping to meet some musical women. It's not that I don't understand this; I'd love to myself. It's just that this isn't a dating site. If women come here to engage about music, they should not be pursued like they're on display in a meat market.
Huh indeed.deastman wrote:Huh? What about that article that Fluffy linked to:BMoore wrote:And as far as I can see, no one but the posters calling someone sexist, is mentioning ability as to what women are not capable of doing.
"The gray-white matter difference may explain why, in adulthood, females are great multi-taskers, while men excel in highly task-focused projects."
Sounds to me that he’s asserting exactly that: that men have superior ability in highly task-focused projects.
Edit:
Or to put it in less kindly terms, which that author is actually insinuating with his pseudo-science, “women are too scatterbrained to concentrate on a single task”. But it all sounds very official and factual and sciency the way he worded it.
You're questionsing OP's motive with your own sexist allegation.Jace-BeOS wrote:I suspect that the OP might've been hoping to meet some musical women. It's not that I don't understand this; I'd love to myself. It's just that this isn't a dating site. If women come here to engage about music, they should not be pursued like they're on display in a meat market.deastman wrote: Going back to the OP, what exactly are we hoping to get out of this conversation anyway?
It's only contentious because certain men want to justify the status quo with pseudoscience.deastman wrote:We’ve been down the path of discussing why there aren’t more women in music production, which became a surprisingly contentious argument.
Much respect for this!deastman wrote:As for my own part, I’m trying to foster a love for all of this stuff in my own daughter. She has my Kurzweil K2000 in her room, along with several guitars. I got her a Korg Littlebits kit. We’ve had a brief foray into Eurorack, and I’m looking forward to teaching her more about that soon. I’ve also encouraged her to learn Python, and given her the tools to pursue her interests in art and animation (my day job).Keep up the good work! I'm assuming she also has the freedom to turn to completely different interests if she chooses
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